Going relatively internet-free for 2 months

While on vacation in 2013, I was without the internet for a good 2 months. On and off, I’d be able to check my emails at an internet cafe for 1 EUR per half hour, but otherwise, I wasn’t on the nets as often as I would be if I were at home.

Overall, it was a good experience but I learned a couple of things about myself:

WHEN I WANT INFO, I WANT IT NOW

Granted, I don’t have a smartphone, so when I am out of the house I have no access to the internet at all, so it isn’t quite as bad as if I had information at my fingertips all the time.

I have taken for granted that if I want to know an answer to a specific question, like “How much sodium or calcium is in an average bottle of mineral water?“, I can’t just boot up the laptop and check quickly.”

Even little questions like who is the woman who plays opposite of Richard Gere in movies like Runaway Bride and Pretty Woman? Julia…. something, was as far as I got, but I couldn’t satisfy my random curiousity easily, and it irked me.

I FELT DISCONNECTED FROM OTHERS

Oddly enough, I felt really disconnected from folks. I am used to shooting off emails to people that act a bit like instant messages.

Sometimes it’s to pass along interesting things that made me think of them, or just to say something that’s on my mind without having to blog it (surprise! I don’t blog everything in my life, even if it may seem like that sometimes).

Without that functionality, I felt cut off from being able to reach and connect to people, no matter how impersonally or remotely.

I am not really a workaholic who works just because I have 2 minutes of free time in between tasks.

I tend to be pretty good at delineating between when my own personal life begins, and when I am supposed to work, but connecting with friends and family was a lot more difficult.

I WAS CRAVING NEWS

Being in foreign countries means that you’re stuck watching BBC News or TV5Monde for stuff that is not local-centric, and that you can actually understand, and in my case, it had to be either in English or French.

As a result, I felt really cut off from news.

Blogs especially, hit me hard. I wanted to read what the new posts were, considering I’m an RSS Feed Junkie (I recommend BlogLovin’ or Feedly by the way).

I wanted to keep up on my usual news sources and I couldn’t.

I HAD TO PLAN AHEAD OF TIME TO CHECK MY FINANCES

I think the very worst thing about being without the internet is that if you have to go to a public internet cafe, you aren’t exactly sure what they put on that computer to monitor its usage.

Do they have keyboard recording software that collects logins and passwords? You never know, and I am always suspicious of all that, which is why even though I use internet cafes, I am careful to make sure I have a good Gmail recovery plan in place.

But in the event that I NEED to check to make sure that my bank accounts are still paying bills like I had scheduled them to do so before I left, and checking my credit card balances to make sure they’re still at $0, I need to actually log in.

Even on vacation, I have to be sure that I paid all my credit cards off in full so that I don’t carry a balance and pay interest, but also that they stay at $0 so I am able to check for any fraud.

I WAS FINE FOR THE MOST PART

All of the above except for the keeping up on my finances and checking my credit cards part, was perfectly doable.

I didn’t REALLY go into withdrawal syndrome, but it did make me appreciate just how much I took an instant, readily secure and available internet connection for granted.

I can give up TV, Telephone and any other kind of modern service, but the Internet is one that I’ll never be able to fully let go.

I REALIZED ONE BIG LESSON: I HAVE A LOT OF FREE TIME

I also realized just how much time I had now that the internet didn’t monopolize my life, which gave me food for thought.

When I am in between contracts and not working, I have a lot of free time but I didn’t realize just HOW MUCH free time I had, because the internet was always there to provide some sort of work or distraction.

As a result, I had lots of time to think, and I managed to write about 90 posts or 3 months worth of material while on vacation during the hours of the day that are too hot to go outside, or too late to go out (I’m not a bars / club / nightlife kind of person).

10 thoughts on “Going relatively internet-free for 2 months”

Coriannesays:

Omg, yes! A few weeks ago I was at my parents and their all-in-one internet/tv/telephone-box was broken, so there was no tv, no internet, no telephone. Still had my cellphone with 4G internet, but the surfing experience is not the same. There is so much free time.

Right now I live in a place with internet and tv included, but sometimes I daydream of getting a new place and NOT getting tv or internet subscriptions… Once I get a new place, I think I will definitely make this an experiment. 😉

Coriannesays:

@save. spend. splurge.: Will do! I’m curious as well how long I’ll last. I predict I can do without the tv, but internet… probably not. Like people mention below, security issues and all that… well, for now, there are no definite moving plans yet, but probably/hopefully within a year I’ll have a new (internet-free, tv-free) place 😉

I tend to go without the internet whenever I go on vacation for a week or two. I found I had the same observation you had about having a lot of free time. Immediately post university I had all sorts of time in the evening to go for a run, cook supper, work on projects… and then suddenly the time just disappeared. The internet has become my TV. It took disconnecting for a week to figure that out. Now I’m trying to be more aware of my usage, and I’m trying to get more things done in the evening before I sit myself down and allow myself to be sucked in.

While I’ve gone without internet for a couple weeks, I *hate* being that disconnected for very much longer for many of the same reasons. For things like bills and such, I don’t want to be at the mercy of public internet (and their so-called security), and if anything unexpected pops up as it often does, I don’t want to be a week or more late in addressing it. It’s a luxury to be well-connected (and consistently so) I realize, but it’s a luxury I don’t like doing without 🙂

I would be fine and adjust without internet… but I really don’t want to! I love the Internet and being able to have all information right at my fingertips. Google is my secret weapon and trusty sidekick.

I am impressed that you got that many posts written. Maybe I need to force myself offline for a bit and get post scheduled ahead!